US4734386A - Boron nitride dopant source for diffusion doping - Google Patents

Boron nitride dopant source for diffusion doping Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US4734386A
US4734386A US06/924,341 US92434186A US4734386A US 4734386 A US4734386 A US 4734386A US 92434186 A US92434186 A US 92434186A US 4734386 A US4734386 A US 4734386A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
boron nitride
dopant
solid
dopant source
diffusion
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Fee Related
Application number
US06/924,341
Inventor
Yoshihiro Kubota
Kenji Itoh
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Shin Etsu Chemical Co Ltd
Original Assignee
Shin Etsu Chemical Co Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Shin Etsu Chemical Co Ltd filed Critical Shin Etsu Chemical Co Ltd
Assigned to SHIN-ETSU CHEMICAL CO., LTD. reassignment SHIN-ETSU CHEMICAL CO., LTD. ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST. Assignors: ITOH, KENJI, KUBOTA, YOSHIHIRO
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US4734386A publication Critical patent/US4734386A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H10SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H10PGENERIC PROCESSES OR APPARATUS FOR THE MANUFACTURE OR TREATMENT OF DEVICES COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H10P32/00Diffusion of dopants within, into or out of wafers, substrates or parts of devices
    • H10P32/10Diffusion of dopants within, into or out of semiconductor bodies or layers
    • H10P32/19Diffusion sources
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S252/00Compositions
    • Y10S252/95Doping agent source material

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a dopant source for diffusion doping of a semiconductor substrate or, more particularly, to a source of a p-type dopant for doping of a semiconductor substrate by the method of diffusion.
  • the last mentioned solid-diffusion method is usually preferred to the first and second methods in respect of the advantages that high uniformity is obtained in the concentration of the dopant over the substrate surface, the apparatus used for the method is relatively simple and inexpensive, the method is suitable for mass production of semiconductor devices and the method can be performed without using any toxic or dangerous gas such as diborane.
  • the dopant source for the solid-diffusion method is usually in the form of a thin disc similar to semiconductor silicon wafers prepared by sintering a fine powder of the metal oxide or metal nitride.
  • a problem in such a solid dopant source in the form of a sintered disc is that the sintered body is more or less unavoidably contaminated with various impurities or, in particular, metallic impurities originally contained in the powder of the metal oxide or nitride subjected to sintering and originating in the binder used to facilitate sintering when it is a metallic compound.
  • the most widely used solid dopant source is a sintered body of boron nitride while boron nitride powders used for sintering usually contain several kinds of impurities such as sodium phosphate, sodium oxide, iron oxide, calcium oxide and carbon as an unavoidable consequence of the method for the preparation of the boron nitride powder.
  • boron nitride powders are sintered usually with admixture of boric anhydride, calcium oxide, aluminum oxide, sodium oxide, aluminum phosphate or silicon dioxide as a binder to ficilitate sintering so that the sintered body of boron nitride always contains these binder materials remaining therein.
  • the above mentioned impurities in the sintered boron nitride body as the solid dopant source originating in the boron nitride powder per se and the binder might cause no serious problems at least some years ago when the semiconductor substrates had small and thin dimensions and no extremely high performance was required for the doped semiconductor devices.
  • the influences caused by the impurities in the solid dopant source are no longer negligible and, according to the inventors' knowledge obtained by the investigations, the above mentioned impurities in the solid dopant source of boron nitride have profound influences on the crystalline dislocations and lattice defects in the semiconductor substrates doped therewith.
  • an object of the present invention is to provide a solid dopant source for diffusion doping of a semiconductor substrate free from the problems and disadvantages in the conventional p-type solid dopant sources for diffusion doping prepared by the sintering method of a powdery dopant material in respect of the impurities unavoidably contained therein.
  • the p-type solid dopant source for diffusion doping of a semiconductor substrate according to the invention is a solid body of which at least the surface layer is formed by the vapor deposition of the p-type dopant compound.
  • the most characteristic feature of the inventive solid dopant source is that at least the surface layer of the solid body as the dopant source is formed by the method of vapor deposition of the dopant compound.
  • the vapor deposition is usually performed by the CVD (chemical vapor deposition) method using a gas or a mixture of gases of high purity as the starting material and the vapor-deposited layer of the dopant compound can be formed, needless to say, without using any binder so that the solid dopant source is absolutely freed from various impurities unavoidable when the solid dopant source is prepared by the sintering techniques of the dopant compound in a powdery form.
  • CVD chemical vapor deposition
  • the solid dopant source of the invention includes several kinds of p-type dopants without particular limitations.
  • the compounds forming the p-type solid dopant source for diffusion doping are exemplified by the oxides and nitrides of the elements belonging to the IIIA Group of the Periodic Table including boron, aluminum, gallium and indium. These oxides or nitrides can be deposited in the CVD process by the reaction of a gasified halide of the dopant element, e.g. boron trichloride, aluminum chloride, gallium fluoride, indium fluoride and the like, with oxygen or water vapor for the oxides or nitrogen or ammonia for the nitrides.
  • a gasified halide of the dopant element e.g. boron trichloride, aluminum chloride, gallium fluoride, indium fluoride and the like, with oxygen or water vapor for the oxides or nitrogen or ammonia for the nitrides.
  • the CVD method is not the only procedure for the vapor deposition of the dopant compound.
  • applicable methods for vapor deposition include physical and electrical methods such as vacuum vapor deposition, sputtering, ion plating and the like although these methods other than CVD are less preferable because an unduly long time is taken in order to obtain a sufficient thickness of the vapor-deposited dopant layer.
  • the CVD method is advantageous in respect of the growing velocity of the vapor-deposited dopant layer to ensure high practical productivity of the process.
  • the CVD method can be performed using boron trichloride and ammonia as the reactants which can be obtained each in a very high purity and with outstanding inexpensiveness to give a great economical advantage.
  • the solid dopant source for diffusion doping according to the invention is usually shaped in a disc-like form having a diameter approximately equal to that of the semiconductor substrate to be subjected to solid diffusion doping using the inventive solid dopant source.
  • the dopant compound is boron nitride
  • the disc-like solid dopant body is heated in an atmosphere containing oxygen or water vapor so as to have the surface oxidized thereby and the thus surface-oxidized dopant discs are held inside a diffusion tube made of quartz glass in an alternate face-to-face array with the semiconductor substrates keeping a small distance between the dopant discs and the adjacent semiconductor substrates followed by heating the diffusion tube at a temperature of about 700° to 1300° C. while a non-oxidizing gas such as nitrogen, argon and helium is passed through the tube.
  • a non-oxidizing gas such as nitrogen, argon and helium
  • the p-type solid dopant source for diffusion doping can give particularly satisfactory results when the dopant compound is boron nitride in comparison with conventional solid dopant sources of boron which may be a sintered body of boron nitride or boron oxide in respect of the unquestionably decreased impurity level which can be as low as only one hundredth to one millionth of the impurity level in conventional sintered bodies. Therefore, a great decrease is achieved in the crystalline dislocations and lattice defects of the semiconductor substrate ascribable to the metallic and carbonaceous impurities contained in the solid dopant source of boron nitride.
  • the absence of any binder in the solid dopant source of the invention furthermore provides a solution of the troubles sometimes encountered in the conventional process of diffusion doping using a sintered solid dopant source such as thermal distortion or deformation of the dopant disc and adhesion of the dopant disc to the quartz glass-made boat supporting the semiconductor substrates and the dopant discs due to melting of the binder in the dopant discs.
  • a gaseous mixture of a boron trichloride gas having a 6-nines purity and ammonia gas having a 5-nines purity was introduced into a vessel for chemical vapor deposition in which a high-purity graphite plate was held and heated at 2000° C. under a reduced pressure of 10 Torr to pyrolytically deposit boron nitride on the graphite surface.
  • 10 discs of pyrolytically vapor-deposited boron nitride were prepared each having a diameter of 100 mm and a thickness of 2 mm.
  • the boron nitride discs contained metallic impurities in an amount not exceeding 10 ppm as a total. After surface oxidation at 1000° C.
  • the boron nitride discs were placed on and supported by a quartz glass-made boat alternately face-to-face together with semiconductor wafers each having a diameter of 100 mm and a thickness of 0.5 mm keeping a distance of 3 mm between the adjacent boron nitride disc and the silicon wafer.
  • the boat supporting the boron nitride discs and silicon wafers was put into a quartz glass-made tube and heated for 30 minutes at 950° C. in an atmosphere of argon to effect doping of the silicon wafers with boron.
  • the thus doped silicon wafers had a p-type sheet resistance of 60 ohm per square.
  • the crystalline disorder in these silicon wafers was that the densities of lattice defects and dislocations per cm 2 were 0.1 and 2, respectively, on an average for the 10 silicon wafers.
  • the same procedure of solid diffusion doping as above was performed using sintered boron nitride discs prepared using boron oxide as the binder.
  • the results were that the doped silicon wafers had a sheet resistance of 150 ohm per square and the crystalline disorder was that the densities per cm 2 of lattice defects and dislocations were about 300 and 1000, respectively, on an average for 10 silicon wafers indicating that much better results could be obtained by using the solid dopant source according to the present invention.
  • Aluminum chloride of 5-nines purity was reacted with water vapor at 1200° C. to effect vapor deposition of aluminum oxide on a quartz glass plate to prepare 15 aluminum oxide sheets of 50 mm by 50 mm by 1.5 mm dimensions. These vapor-deposited aluminum oxide sheets were used as a solid diffusion source for p-type diffusion doping of 15 germanium substrates each having a diameter of 50 mm and a thickness of 0.3 mm at 1200° C. for 20 minutes in a similar manner to Example 1.
  • the thus obtained p-type doped germanium substrates had a sheet resistance of 150 ohm per square and the densities per cm 2 of the lattice defects and dislocations in these germanium substrates were 0.5 and 5, respectively, on an average.
  • the same process of diffusion doping as above was repeated using conventional sintered aluminum oxide sheets as the solid diffusion source.
  • the results were that the densities of lattice defects and dislocations in the doped germanium substrates were 650 and 3200, respectively, per cm 2 on an average indicating the great advantage obtained by using the solid diffusion source according to the invention.

Landscapes

  • Crystals, And After-Treatments Of Crystals (AREA)
  • Chemical Vapour Deposition (AREA)
  • Ceramic Products (AREA)

Abstract

A solid body formed by the chemical vapor-phase deposition of, for example, boron nitride is used as a solid dopant source for diffusion doping of semiconductor substrates in place of conventional sintered bodies of boron nitride. By virtue of the extremely low impurity content of the vapor-deposited dopant source in comparison with conventional sintered bodies, which unavoidably contain impurities originating in the powder of the dopant compound for sintering and the binder to facilitate sintering, the semiconductor substrate doped using the inventive dopant source has outstandingly low densities of lattice defects and dislocations in addition to the absence of troubles in the diffusion process due to melting of the binder contained in the sintered dopant sources.

Description

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a dopant source for diffusion doping of a semiconductor substrate or, more particularly, to a source of a p-type dopant for doping of a semiconductor substrate by the method of diffusion.
Several methods are known and practiced in the prior art for doping a semiconductor substrate with a dopant by the method of diffusion including: (a) the gas-diffusion method using a gaseous dopant as the diffusion source; (b) the ion plating method by bombarding the semiconductor substrate with ions of a dopant element under high vacuum; and (c) the solid-diffusion method using a sintered body of a metal oxide or metal nitride. The last mentioned solid-diffusion method is usually preferred to the first and second methods in respect of the advantages that high uniformity is obtained in the concentration of the dopant over the substrate surface, the apparatus used for the method is relatively simple and inexpensive, the method is suitable for mass production of semiconductor devices and the method can be performed without using any toxic or dangerous gas such as diborane.
The dopant source for the solid-diffusion method is usually in the form of a thin disc similar to semiconductor silicon wafers prepared by sintering a fine powder of the metal oxide or metal nitride. A problem in such a solid dopant source in the form of a sintered disc is that the sintered body is more or less unavoidably contaminated with various impurities or, in particular, metallic impurities originally contained in the powder of the metal oxide or nitride subjected to sintering and originating in the binder used to facilitate sintering when it is a metallic compound. When a semiconductor substrate of silicon or germanium is desired to be doped with a p-type dopant, for example, the most widely used solid dopant source is a sintered body of boron nitride while boron nitride powders used for sintering usually contain several kinds of impurities such as sodium phosphate, sodium oxide, iron oxide, calcium oxide and carbon as an unavoidable consequence of the method for the preparation of the boron nitride powder. Further, boron nitride powders are sintered usually with admixture of boric anhydride, calcium oxide, aluminum oxide, sodium oxide, aluminum phosphate or silicon dioxide as a binder to ficilitate sintering so that the sintered body of boron nitride always contains these binder materials remaining therein. The above mentioned impurities in the sintered boron nitride body as the solid dopant source originating in the boron nitride powder per se and the binder might cause no serious problems at least some years ago when the semiconductor substrates had small and thin dimensions and no extremely high performance was required for the doped semiconductor devices.
Along with the trend of requirements in recent years toward larger and larger diameters of the semiconductor substrates and higher and higher performace of semiconductor devices, however, the influences caused by the impurities in the solid dopant source are no longer negligible and, according to the inventors' knowledge obtained by the investigations, the above mentioned impurities in the solid dopant source of boron nitride have profound influences on the crystalline dislocations and lattice defects in the semiconductor substrates doped therewith.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Thus, an object of the present invention is to provide a solid dopant source for diffusion doping of a semiconductor substrate free from the problems and disadvantages in the conventional p-type solid dopant sources for diffusion doping prepared by the sintering method of a powdery dopant material in respect of the impurities unavoidably contained therein.
The p-type solid dopant source for diffusion doping of a semiconductor substrate according to the invention is a solid body of which at least the surface layer is formed by the vapor deposition of the p-type dopant compound.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
As is mentioned in the above given summary of the invention, the most characteristic feature of the inventive solid dopant source is that at least the surface layer of the solid body as the dopant source is formed by the method of vapor deposition of the dopant compound. The vapor deposition is usually performed by the CVD (chemical vapor deposition) method using a gas or a mixture of gases of high purity as the starting material and the vapor-deposited layer of the dopant compound can be formed, needless to say, without using any binder so that the solid dopant source is absolutely freed from various impurities unavoidable when the solid dopant source is prepared by the sintering techniques of the dopant compound in a powdery form.
The solid dopant source of the invention includes several kinds of p-type dopants without particular limitations. The compounds forming the p-type solid dopant source for diffusion doping are exemplified by the oxides and nitrides of the elements belonging to the IIIA Group of the Periodic Table including boron, aluminum, gallium and indium. These oxides or nitrides can be deposited in the CVD process by the reaction of a gasified halide of the dopant element, e.g. boron trichloride, aluminum chloride, gallium fluoride, indium fluoride and the like, with oxygen or water vapor for the oxides or nitrogen or ammonia for the nitrides.
The CVD method is not the only procedure for the vapor deposition of the dopant compound. For example, applicable methods for vapor deposition include physical and electrical methods such as vacuum vapor deposition, sputtering, ion plating and the like although these methods other than CVD are less preferable because an unduly long time is taken in order to obtain a sufficient thickness of the vapor-deposited dopant layer. On the contrary, the CVD method is advantageous in respect of the growing velocity of the vapor-deposited dopant layer to ensure high practical productivity of the process. When the desired dopant compound is boron nitride, in particular, the CVD method can be performed using boron trichloride and ammonia as the reactants which can be obtained each in a very high purity and with outstanding inexpensiveness to give a great economical advantage.
The solid dopant source for diffusion doping according to the invention is usually shaped in a disc-like form having a diameter approximately equal to that of the semiconductor substrate to be subjected to solid diffusion doping using the inventive solid dopant source. When the dopant compound is boron nitride, in particular, the disc-like solid dopant body is heated in an atmosphere containing oxygen or water vapor so as to have the surface oxidized thereby and the thus surface-oxidized dopant discs are held inside a diffusion tube made of quartz glass in an alternate face-to-face array with the semiconductor substrates keeping a small distance between the dopant discs and the adjacent semiconductor substrates followed by heating the diffusion tube at a temperature of about 700° to 1300° C. while a non-oxidizing gas such as nitrogen, argon and helium is passed through the tube.
The p-type solid dopant source for diffusion doping can give particularly satisfactory results when the dopant compound is boron nitride in comparison with conventional solid dopant sources of boron which may be a sintered body of boron nitride or boron oxide in respect of the unquestionably decreased impurity level which can be as low as only one hundredth to one millionth of the impurity level in conventional sintered bodies. Therefore, a great decrease is achieved in the crystalline dislocations and lattice defects of the semiconductor substrate ascribable to the metallic and carbonaceous impurities contained in the solid dopant source of boron nitride. The absence of any binder in the solid dopant source of the invention furthermore provides a solution of the troubles sometimes encountered in the conventional process of diffusion doping using a sintered solid dopant source such as thermal distortion or deformation of the dopant disc and adhesion of the dopant disc to the quartz glass-made boat supporting the semiconductor substrates and the dopant discs due to melting of the binder in the dopant discs.
In the following, examples are given to illustrate the inventive p-type solid dopant source for diffusion doping in more detail.
EXAMPLE 1
A gaseous mixture of a boron trichloride gas having a 6-nines purity and ammonia gas having a 5-nines purity was introduced into a vessel for chemical vapor deposition in which a high-purity graphite plate was held and heated at 2000° C. under a reduced pressure of 10 Torr to pyrolytically deposit boron nitride on the graphite surface. In this manner, 10 discs of pyrolytically vapor-deposited boron nitride were prepared each having a diameter of 100 mm and a thickness of 2 mm. The boron nitride discs contained metallic impurities in an amount not exceeding 10 ppm as a total. After surface oxidation at 1000° C. in an atmosphere of oxygen, the boron nitride discs were placed on and supported by a quartz glass-made boat alternately face-to-face together with semiconductor wafers each having a diameter of 100 mm and a thickness of 0.5 mm keeping a distance of 3 mm between the adjacent boron nitride disc and the silicon wafer. The boat supporting the boron nitride discs and silicon wafers was put into a quartz glass-made tube and heated for 30 minutes at 950° C. in an atmosphere of argon to effect doping of the silicon wafers with boron. The thus doped silicon wafers had a p-type sheet resistance of 60 ohm per square. The crystalline disorder in these silicon wafers was that the densities of lattice defects and dislocations per cm2 were 0.1 and 2, respectively, on an average for the 10 silicon wafers.
For comparison, the same procedure of solid diffusion doping as above was performed using sintered boron nitride discs prepared using boron oxide as the binder. The results were that the doped silicon wafers had a sheet resistance of 150 ohm per square and the crystalline disorder was that the densities per cm2 of lattice defects and dislocations were about 300 and 1000, respectively, on an average for 10 silicon wafers indicating that much better results could be obtained by using the solid dopant source according to the present invention.
When the conventional sintered boron nitride discs were used as the diffusion source, moreover, the discs were partly molten down on and adhered to the quartz glass-made boat to cause great difficulties in handling while no such troubles were caused when the vapor-deposited boron nitride discs according to the invention were used as the solid diffusion source. This great advantage obtained by use of the inventive diffusion source is presumably due to the absence of any binder material in the solid diffusion source.
EXAMPLE 2
Aluminum chloride of 5-nines purity was reacted with water vapor at 1200° C. to effect vapor deposition of aluminum oxide on a quartz glass plate to prepare 15 aluminum oxide sheets of 50 mm by 50 mm by 1.5 mm dimensions. These vapor-deposited aluminum oxide sheets were used as a solid diffusion source for p-type diffusion doping of 15 germanium substrates each having a diameter of 50 mm and a thickness of 0.3 mm at 1200° C. for 20 minutes in a similar manner to Example 1. The thus obtained p-type doped germanium substrates had a sheet resistance of 150 ohm per square and the densities per cm2 of the lattice defects and dislocations in these germanium substrates were 0.5 and 5, respectively, on an average.
For comparison, the same process of diffusion doping as above was repeated using conventional sintered aluminum oxide sheets as the solid diffusion source. The results were that the densities of lattice defects and dislocations in the doped germanium substrates were 650 and 3200, respectively, per cm2 on an average indicating the great advantage obtained by using the solid diffusion source according to the invention.
It was also noted that, although the vapor-deposited aluminum oxide sheets were found to adhere slightly to the quarts glass-made boat to cause some difficulties in handling as compared to the vapor-deposited boron nitride discs in Example 1, the difficulties in handling were well tolerable in comparison with the sintered aluminum oxide sheets.

Claims (1)

What is claimed is:
1. In a method of doping a semiconductor substrate to impart p-type conductivity thereto by the solid diffusion method in which solid boron nitride as a p-type source and a semiconductor substrate are heated together in a container and the semiconductor substrate doped by the boron nitride, the improvement wherein the boron nitride is a solid body of which at least the surface layer is formed by the pyrolytic chemical deposition of boron nitride.
US06/924,341 1985-10-26 1986-10-24 Boron nitride dopant source for diffusion doping Expired - Fee Related US4734386A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP60240215A JPS62101026A (en) 1985-10-26 1985-10-26 Impurity diffusion source
JP60-240215 1985-10-26

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US4734386A true US4734386A (en) 1988-03-29

Family

ID=17056160

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US06/924,341 Expired - Fee Related US4734386A (en) 1985-10-26 1986-10-24 Boron nitride dopant source for diffusion doping

Country Status (2)

Country Link
US (1) US4734386A (en)
JP (1) JPS62101026A (en)

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4857480A (en) * 1986-10-29 1989-08-15 Mitel Corporation Method for diffusing P-type material using boron disks
US5086016A (en) * 1990-10-31 1992-02-04 International Business Machines Corporation Method of making semiconductor device contact including transition metal-compound dopant source
EP0472012A3 (en) * 1990-08-22 1992-06-03 Shin-Etsu Handotai Company, Limited Method of boron diffusion into semiconductor wafers
US5225367A (en) * 1989-08-17 1993-07-06 Semiconductor Energy Laboratory Co., Ltd. Method for manufacturing an electronic device
US5938969A (en) * 1996-02-05 1999-08-17 Aea Technology Plc Fire suppressant powder
US6365493B1 (en) * 2000-01-24 2002-04-02 Ball Semiconductor, Inc. Method for antimony and boron doping of spherical semiconductors
RU2183365C1 (en) * 2000-12-28 2002-06-10 Государственное унитарное предприятие "Научно-производственное предприятие "Пульсар" Method for boron diffusion in silicon plate
US20080132047A1 (en) * 2006-12-05 2008-06-05 General Electric Company Method for doping impurities

Families Citing this family (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPH0277118A (en) * 1988-09-13 1990-03-16 Shin Etsu Handotai Co Ltd Diffusion of boron into semiconductor wafer
JPH02222136A (en) * 1989-02-23 1990-09-04 Shin Etsu Chem Co Ltd Boron diffusing agent
JP2809431B2 (en) * 1989-07-07 1998-10-08 富士電機 株式会社 Boron diffusion method

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3243373A (en) * 1961-05-16 1966-03-29 Siemens Ag Method of doping semiconductor material, particularly silicon, with boron
US3540926A (en) * 1968-10-09 1970-11-17 Gen Electric Nitride insulating films deposited by reactive evaporation
US4264803A (en) * 1978-01-10 1981-04-28 Union Carbide Corporation Resistance-heated pyrolytic boron nitride coated graphite boat for metal vaporization
US4509997A (en) * 1982-10-19 1985-04-09 The Secretary Of State For Defence In Her Britannic Majesty's Government Of The United Kingdom Of Great Britain And Northern Ireland Organometallic chemical vapor deposition of films utilizing organic heterocyclic compounds
US4558507A (en) * 1982-11-12 1985-12-17 Nec Corporation Method of manufacturing semiconductor device

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3243373A (en) * 1961-05-16 1966-03-29 Siemens Ag Method of doping semiconductor material, particularly silicon, with boron
US3540926A (en) * 1968-10-09 1970-11-17 Gen Electric Nitride insulating films deposited by reactive evaporation
US4264803A (en) * 1978-01-10 1981-04-28 Union Carbide Corporation Resistance-heated pyrolytic boron nitride coated graphite boat for metal vaporization
US4509997A (en) * 1982-10-19 1985-04-09 The Secretary Of State For Defence In Her Britannic Majesty's Government Of The United Kingdom Of Great Britain And Northern Ireland Organometallic chemical vapor deposition of films utilizing organic heterocyclic compounds
US4558507A (en) * 1982-11-12 1985-12-17 Nec Corporation Method of manufacturing semiconductor device

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4857480A (en) * 1986-10-29 1989-08-15 Mitel Corporation Method for diffusing P-type material using boron disks
US5225367A (en) * 1989-08-17 1993-07-06 Semiconductor Energy Laboratory Co., Ltd. Method for manufacturing an electronic device
EP0472012A3 (en) * 1990-08-22 1992-06-03 Shin-Etsu Handotai Company, Limited Method of boron diffusion into semiconductor wafers
US5171708A (en) * 1990-08-22 1992-12-15 Shin-Etsu Handotai Co., Ltd. Method of boron diffusion into semiconductor wafers having reduced stacking faults
US5086016A (en) * 1990-10-31 1992-02-04 International Business Machines Corporation Method of making semiconductor device contact including transition metal-compound dopant source
US5938969A (en) * 1996-02-05 1999-08-17 Aea Technology Plc Fire suppressant powder
US6365493B1 (en) * 2000-01-24 2002-04-02 Ball Semiconductor, Inc. Method for antimony and boron doping of spherical semiconductors
RU2183365C1 (en) * 2000-12-28 2002-06-10 Государственное унитарное предприятие "Научно-производственное предприятие "Пульсар" Method for boron diffusion in silicon plate
US20080132047A1 (en) * 2006-12-05 2008-06-05 General Electric Company Method for doping impurities
US7807556B2 (en) 2006-12-05 2010-10-05 General Electric Company Method for doping impurities

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
JPS62101026A (en) 1987-05-11

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
EP0149044B1 (en) Boron nitride containing titanium nitride, method of producing the same and composite ceramics produced therefrom
EP0192143A2 (en) Permeable polymer membrane for desiccation of gas
US4734386A (en) Boron nitride dopant source for diffusion doping
US11047041B2 (en) Method and system for preparing polycrystalline group III metal nitride
US4099924A (en) Apparatus improvements for growing single crystalline silicon sheets
US4900526A (en) Polycrystalline rhombohedral boron nitride and method of producing the same
GB2138450A (en) A process for the production of a multicomponent amorphous silicon film for use in solar cells
EP1528121B1 (en) Method of manufacturing a silicon carbide coated graphite material
US4096297A (en) Isotropic boron nitride and method of making same
JPH10509689A (en) Method and apparatus for producing silicon carbide single crystal by sublimation breeding
EP0174553A2 (en) Method for production of silicon thin film piezoresistive devices
US4341818A (en) Method for producing silicon dioxide/polycrystalline silicon interfaces
US5350720A (en) Triple-layered ceramic heater
US5759646A (en) Vessel of pyrolytic boron nitride
GB2034113A (en) Open tube aluminium diffusion
EP0617141A1 (en) Improved method for growing continuous diamond films
JPH0688866B2 (en) Boron nitride coated crucible and method of manufacturing the same
Feldman et al. Mass spectra analyses of impurities and ion clusters in amorphous and crystalline silicon films
JPH0825838B2 (en) Graphite material for epitaxial growth
KR20240009063A (en) Method for preparing thin film of three-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenide having high uniformity
US3342619A (en) Method for growing germania films
Doi et al. Chemical vapour deposition coating of crystalline Si3N4 on a quartz crucible for nitrogen-doped Czochralski silicon crystal growth
Taft Epitaxial Growth of Doped Silicon Using an Iodine Cycle
JPH079059B2 (en) Method for producing carbon thin film
JPS62123094A (en) Susceptor for vapor growth of semiconductor

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: SHIN-ETSU CHEMICAL CO., LTD., 6-1, OTEMACHI 2-CHOM

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST.;ASSIGNORS:KUBOTA, YOSHIHIRO;ITOH, KENJI;REEL/FRAME:004623/0366

Effective date: 19861001

FEPP Fee payment procedure

Free format text: PAYOR NUMBER ASSIGNED (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: ASPN); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: LARGE ENTITY

FPAY Fee payment

Year of fee payment: 4

FPAY Fee payment

Year of fee payment: 8

REMI Maintenance fee reminder mailed
LAPS Lapse for failure to pay maintenance fees
FP Lapsed due to failure to pay maintenance fee

Effective date: 20000329

STCH Information on status: patent discontinuation

Free format text: PATENT EXPIRED DUE TO NONPAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEES UNDER 37 CFR 1.362